About Me

My photo
I am: The Djembe Warrior Drummer Princess, The Belly Shaking Goddess, The Seeker, The Mystic, and The Writer in Quiescence.

Pledge:

I vow to write in this blog at least ONCE a week about my journey as a writer. I promise that I shall conquer my fear of the Written Word and Blank Page/Screen. I will overcome the Writer's Block and will publish numerous times. I will grow as a writer and as a human being undeterred by the daily hardship and nuisance. (Yeah right....)

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Monday, July 26, 2010

If My Novel Was A Manga!

I've had a twisted novel plot haunting me for years, and at times I revisit its dark and perverted world.  The plot is pretty simple:

In a totalitarian society controlled by government, where a person's life is worth nothing and basic human rights are nonexistent, an unremarkable government worker gets arrested on false charges of political crime.  His wife is summoned to the secret police service and is given a choice - if she performs "certain duties" willingly with the commandant, who is secretly obsessed with her, he will let her husband go.  She keeps refusing, her husband's interrogation and torture escalates in monstrosity and  cruelty in order to break her spirit and force her into the arms of the devilishly handsome but corrupted and twisted commandant.   In this sick and perverted story, the rules of right and wrong are challenged and discarded with each passing page, leaving the reader increasingly aghast and disgusted, but unable to turn away.


And then, I started reading a shojo manga called "Black Bird", which is as twisted, sick, and sexually perverted as shojo manga can be.  Anything goes - handsome villains, sexually insatiable vampires, killer demons, as long as a teenage girl is involved in the middle of all the blood and gore and sexual tension.  


So I thought, "What if my novel were a shojo manga?"  How free would that be!  Here I am, trying to rationalize the setting, the politics, the characters' reasoning, mentally fighting with the future critics who will try to find fault with any weakness in the plot.  Now, if my novel were a manga, everything would magically fall into place! 


 Wife - a damsel in distress.
Commandant - a handsome, cruel villain.
Husband - a useless, but cute and pitiful good guy.
Setting - a fantasy totalitarian world in an undetermined country and future.
Sexual tension - escalating exponentially.
Blood/torture - elaborate and lurid.



If only I could draw! >_<

Monday, July 19, 2010

The Trick Is To Keep Breathing

Am I a true writer?  Laypeople think that only if you are published, you can be considered a REAL writer.  Others, the more knowledgeable about the agonizing process of writing, say that you MUST WRITE to be a writer.  And still others, the envious and vicious type, a.k.a. my ex-boyfriend, think that you are ONLY a writer if you GET PAID for what you write.

These days, I am doing neither, struggling with trying to find motivation to write every day, and being completely overwhelmed and disgusted by even starting to think about the whole tedious writing process.

Having finished two online writing courses, that something possessed me to take at the same time, I feel wrung out.  All my words have been washed out of me, strung out to flap in the wind on the clothesline, like forgotten laundry.  All my motivation for writing, cleaning, having fun, and simply living is gone with the trickle of sand in an hourglass.  All that is left is silence and the residue of self-criticism.  Empty time, filled with incessant useless ruminations about my own futility.

Am I a writer?

Instead of writing, I read about writing, I subscribed to the Writer magazine, I have found a living, breathing writer's group in Buffalo, I started taking notes on a novel that has been haunting me for years, I have jotted down a few passing thoughts in poetic form, I even squeezed out a few freewriting pages out of my tired and stressed out brain, but I still do not feel like I am WRITING, or that I am a WRITER.

What would it take for me to acknowledge, to truly believe that I AM?

Natalie Goldberg, the guru of creative writing, says that we have to be prepared for some of the worst writing to come out of ourselves in our writing lives.  I think that's what I am producing right now.  And I hope that this drought will pass, and there will be the Great Flood of Inspiration in future.  I will keep criticizing myself and overcoming my self-flagellation every single day, just trudging on, and producing some of the worst writing in the history of the Universe, and then, I may have a single gem of brilliance under all this pile of rubbish and rumble.

"The trick is to keep breathing...."


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When are you going to rise to the challenge?
Always looking at others' success 


So you think you can?


From the grime of the soul's sorrow
A poem blooms

Friday, May 28, 2010

Ramblings and Complaints

Ok, I never took upon me to use this blog to freewrite from my stream of consciousness, and complain bitterly.  But there's a new beginning for everything.  Here it goes:

Why on Earth did I think that I could handle TWO Creative Writing courses in addition to my job, and why on Earth did I think that writing poetry in English would be a breeze?!!!  This is the hardest thing I had to do in my life, except taking a Statistics course and struggling with the concept of Probability.  Even Quantum Mechanics that I read about FOR PLEASURE in my own free time did not seem as hard as Probability.  Now Poetry?

Who in their right mind calls Free Verse FREE?  It has more restrictions than the rhyme and rhythm poetry.  At least keeping the rhythm is completely natural to me, rhyming is much harder, for I have a hard time finding words to rhyme in the language that is not my own.  But in Russian I produced the gems of poetry! When I was 18! What happened since then?  Why now am I struggling so much?  My brain is literally splitting up, and some new areas are at work that have never been used.  I feel the connections between the neurons forming painfully with each new poetic exercise that the instructor throws at us. 

One of the assignments is to write a SONNET!  I am not Shakespeare, I'm just a beginner, as well as some other students taking that class.  As far as I remember from the good old Russian school days, the sonnet form was considered hard even for experienced poets.  So far I have gotten first four lines. With the PERFECT rhyme and rhythm and even making sense,  but continuing with more seems impossible.

On top of that, I have to come up with a prose poem, a poem about an event I heard on the news about and assignments from a new lesson that I haven't even read yet for the fear of stressing myself out.  In addition to that, I am extremely behind my creativity training prose class, where assignments are much more comfortable and easy for me, but no less time consuming.  I have to write about a word of choice and about a writing day in a perfect world, and conduct Internet research on a subject I am not familiar with.  The last one I feel the most comfortable with, because my profession as an ESL teacher have made me an expert in Internet research on almost any subject, including an academic one. Oh Lord, please don't remind me about doing research in grad school in the Cybrary into the wee hours.

As though all these responsibilities I put on myself are not enough, I also set my mind on finishing or restarting for the millionth time the story about Shibshib getting lost for the publication in Chicken Soup for the Soul, which is due MAY 31, which is like in TWO days!  Oh, yeah, look at me, I'm a Superman, I can do it all AND successfully plan lessons. 

And to top all this off, my writing and communicative ability, as well as cognitive skills are almost non-existent now.  It is Friday, I've been struggling with the cold, lack of sleep and adjusting to the work schedule the whole week, and my brain is on strike, or vacation.  So, I declare today a NOWRITE DAY, and I am NOT writing.  As in not writing anything that needs to be written.  I can't deal with requirements and expectations of being judged right now, so I am just rambling on aimlessly in my blog that no one will read anyway.

So, tomorrow, I will go on another Wine Tasting class, and then on a mindless shopping trip at the mall with a friend.  Sunday, I will buy materials for our patio project with my husband, and have a  barbecue dinner at another friend's house.  To Hell with the writing which seems like a nightmare now.  After recharging my brain cells, I will produce yet another masterpiece, as I have always done in the past.

Just have faith and let go.

Wednesday, May 19, 2010

Discovery: False Starts

I have not realized how many times I tried to write and how many times I gave up.  The following was found in the old journal of sporadic entries from 1999 to 2002, which wasn't the only one started and then abandoned.  I was blown away by the quality of my writing.   I am glad I found courage not to give up anymore.

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It's the first to greet me in the morning.  It's the last to wish me good night's sleep.  It's in a sickly pale face of the moon; it's in the threatening frown of the clouds enclosing the sun.

It's so familiar, it's become a part of my identity, ME.  It's been with me so long, I can hardly remember when I was free of its company.  Maybe that's why I befriended it, because I never had anyone to take it's place.  The imaginary friend of adulthood.

It hits unexpectedly, or should I say expectedly, since it's always there feasting on my self-confidence, preying on my consciousness.

When I used to write poetry, I would call it "My Pain".  When it fits the schedule, I call it "PMS".  Other poeple call it "Being moody".  If I had a shrink, he would call it "Depression".

From the moment I open my eyes to the moment I sink into the bed -- it is always my companion.

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Looking for a job is like looking for a mate:  full of bitter rejections, unfulfilled dreams, and missed opportunities.

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Why does every man, when he is with his male friends, turn into a belching monster, too eagerly laughing at their jokes about his own impotence?

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Friday, May 7, 2010

Cooker's Block

Note: "cooker" is an incorrect but endearing term used by ESL learners that means "cook" or "chef".

So here I am at my Physical Therapy, doing the treadmill.  I love the treadmill, for it lets me concentrate on some creative writing book full of inspiring ideas, and at the same time do some deep torturous self-examination.  As Socrates proclaimed at his trial, which would eventually sentence him to death, "The unexamined life is not worth living", so I am the Great Master of this sport, setting my own trial and being my own plaintiff, defendant, advocate, prosecutor and judge, .

As I try to concentrate on the "Writing as a Sacred Path:" by Jill Jepson, who traveled the world analyzing the spiritual practices of all religions and marrying it with the writing practices, and as I am being enlightened by another pearl of wisdom about nurturing the stories like you would plant a seed, the self-deprecating plaintiff kicks in.  "You are no good.  You ain't no writer.  You can't create nothing.  You are a boring person, a whiner, and a bad wife.  You always make problems for yourself.  Why you can't just let it go and be happy for once!  What was the last time you cooked dinner?  No wonder your husband don't like you."

Who can fight with that?  I, the defendant, just let it go on, ramble itself out, trying to focus on another pearl of wisdom from this wonderful book.  A thought pops into my mind, that time from a wise mature compassionate advocate, the one that keeps observing all from the back of my consciousness.  "You don't just have a writer's block, you have a cooking block.  That's why you can't cook and come up with any idea of what to cook.  You are too tired and winded to create anything."  Yes, thank you for your understanding.  Finally someone not trying to judge me.

As I keep walking on the treadmill and thinking what would I like to do for myself today, what would my heart desire, I see an image of a dusty honorable bottle of shiraz, so dark that it's concealing the treasure inside it.  Yeah, shiraz sounds good.  I tried it for the first time in Tandoori's, Indian restaurant, and it was sublime like a vampire's feast: spicy, deep, earthy, black currant, thick, violet blood.  Since then I've wanted to buy a bottle at Premiere but never found time.  Now is the time. 


Reliving the tangy aroma of the wine, my mind comes up with the perfectly paired dish to accompany it: medium done, with a pink kissable softness inside and smoky seared crust on the outside, grilled sirloin steak, light on the spices to enhance the real taste of meat;  woodsy crimini mushrooms and caramelized onions sauteed in olive oil with savory and caraway seeds; plain salad with iceberg lettuce, slices of radish and cucumber, garnished with parsley, drizzled with lime juice and olive oil, seasoned with a dash of freshly ground black pepper and salt.  Simplicity and sincerity, without embellishments.


So, my plan for the night was determined.  The sage old bearded  judge has spoken.  With the new-found goal and creativity, I create a meal that is perfection in itself, like a brilliantly written poem. Writing and cooking are intermingled, both being the capricious children of inspiration.  You have to dig deep inside the well of yourself to find the perfect recipe from your soul. 


 Needless to say, my husband was pleased. ;)
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And for the true wine connoisseur,

here's the wine I drank with that unforgettable meal:

Saturday, May 1, 2010

Letter to Elizabeth Gilbert

Dear Liz, 

May I call you that?  Because that's what you are to me - Liz.  I consider you as close as a friend, or maybe even closer.  You are more than a friend.  You are my mentor, my guide, my guru.  Actually, you are my Jesus.  And your book "Eat Pray Love" is my Bible.

Do I sound too pompous?  I didn't mean that, for what I am sharing is coming from the deepest regions of my heart.  This is the truth I am telling.  You, girl, changed my life.  Your book and your thoughts, like you just plucked them from my mind. You were talking to me in your book, straight to me, like a dear friend at a bar with a drink in her hand, telling it like it is without avoidance and embellishments because the drink made her sincere enough to speak her mind.

And I owe it to you, those sleepless nights on the bathroom floor, trying to contact God, waiting for the sign that He exists, asking for the meaning of life.  Wanting to write, but being scared to start.  Conquering my fear and taking the first step.  Signing up for the online class.  Loving every minute of it.  Finding my voice.  Feeling like I finally fit in, like I found my niche in life. Blogging at 1:19 am about the writing life.  Publishing in the newspaper.  Having something to say, and somebody to read it.  Trying to conquer myself.  Stepping out of the comfort zone.  Listen to the voice in my head, dictating poetic verses to me in the middle of driving.  

You, Liz, are not just a famous writer to me, you are an example of what a thirty-something woman like me can achieve if she puts her mind to it and is not too scared to share with the world her innermost thoughts, even though some people might say they sound too self-absorbed.  I am too very much self-absorbed and melodramatic, but it seems like there is a market out there for people like us, and we will be heard.  

Liz, the Seeker's soul, the childless woman by choice, the Enlightened, I have so much in common with you, and I hope that one day, I will be able to tell it all to you face to face.  We will share a drink at a dim quiet bar, soothed by a mellow Miles Davis' saxophone, or Nina Simone's wistful voice.  Dream big, that's what they say.  So I am dreaming.

With great love and respect,
Lu
XOXO

Thursday, April 8, 2010

Waiting to Write

Having not written in a while due to sickness and life's turmoil, I am scared that I will never be able to produce anything worthwhile anymore.  I'm a one hit wonder with one essay published by a local newspaper, big on words and small on action. As I struggle to pull out the words from the deepest regions of my soul, from the hidden caverns of my slow, encased in a thick fog mind, I am disheartened and disappointed at myself.

With so many writing projects in sight, I keep telling myself I will work on them the next day, only to come home to a horrible headache and a stack of essays to correct.  Dinner uncooked, cat litter uncleaned, house in disarray, essays uncorrected, only enough energy left to lie on the couch, unthinking and staring mindlessly at TV while American Next Top Model or American Idol is on, feeling guilty for not being able to juggle my health, house, husband, cat, work, and writing. 

How do they do that, the women who are actually married WITH CHILDREN AND TWO PART TIME JOBS?  Are they blessed with special superhuman powers and can survive without any amount of sleep?  Do they caffeinate themselves to such extent that they actually have energy to keep up with a million tasks a day?  Do they delegate half of their household chores on their husbands who actually have time to obey?  Or do they just feel satisfied enough with keeping their lives half-lived, meals half-prepared, house barely cleaned up after the dog brought all this mess from the backyard, husband on the back burner, children dropped off at multiple after-school activities to delay dealing with them, while the mothers are trying to catch their breath?

I don't know how they do that and why I am incapable of getting a hold of myself and my life, since I have the luxury of working only part time and NOT having children.  But here I am, struggling to survive every minute of every day, toiling through each heavy moment laden with responsibilities, barely relaxing and constantly feeling exhausted from duty, waiting for that free moment of time when I actually feel struck with inspiration and energy to string a perfect sentence together .

Waiting to write.